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One of the more colorful aspects of Northwoods history is that 1930s-era gangsters such as Al Capone, Baby Face Nelson, and John Dillinger spent time in
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Adelard and Victoria Dault moved to Rhinelander from Merrill around the turn of the century. Their son, Albert Henry Dault, was born in Rhinelander in January 1902. Albert was a fun-loving child who earned the nickname “Bolly.” During his childhood, Bolly Dault was well known around Rhinelander and could often be found on Brown Street earning nickels from local shoppers as he performed handstands and other tumbling tricks.
As Bolly Dault got older, his tricks became more daring. He began doing handstands on the backrest of kitchen chairs and on the tops of ladders. In his late teens, Bolly Dault worked for a short time at the paper mill, refrigerator plant, and Thunder Lake mill. He married Ruby Lee of Bessemer, Michigan, in 1921, but working as a laborer held no appeal for Dault. Even as he started a family, Dault was barnstorming around small towns in Wisconsin and Michigan, performing feats of acrobatic skill for tips.
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Our ancestors had to cope with the specter of disease and the possibility of death in ways that most of us cannot comprehend. There was a near constant fear that smallpox, tuberculosis, typhoid fever, cholera, diphtheria, pneumonia, and any number of childhood infections could strike and kill without warning. Of these maladies, smallpox was the most widespread medical terror of the past, and it was a particular concern in the Northwoods where it spread throughout the lumber camps.
There was a nationwide smallpox epidemic at the turn of the twentieth century. Hundreds of people died in major cities across the United States, and smaller communities like those in the Northwoods saw the epidemic wreak havoc on local economies. A smallpox vaccination had been available since 1796, but without government regulation to ensure quality and safety it was a risky and invasive procedure. As a result, many people resisted vaccination and thought the idea of compulsory vaccination